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I am aware of the fact that probably most people already know about Dropbox, but I still want to write about it since I really like this service and there must be some people that still need to be convinced to use it :)

Dropbox is a cross-platform service for file sharing, synchronizing and backup. The application is free, along with basic use of the service (up to a limit of 2GB). If you choose to add 50GB of storage, it will set you back $10 (just over £5) per month, or $99 (about £56) per year. That means that what you copy on one computer (let's say you have an Ubuntu OS at home and copy something in the Dropbox folder) is synchronized with your other computer (for instance: you Windows XP computer from work). It can be used in many different ways, other than it's main purpose, like:

To get started, you can go to this link (you will get 2GB for free + some extra 250 mb for my referral link - yes, I also get 250 MB extra, but not more than 3 GB overall), create an account and download Dropbox for your current OS. For Ubuntu, you will download a .deb file which after you have installed it, you need to go to Applications > Internet > Dropbox and only after following the steps on the screen you will have Dropbox installed. You will then need to restart Nautilus:

killall nautilus

If it doesn't start again, just type in a Terminal:

nautilus

In Linux, the default Dropbox folder can be found in: $home/Dropbox.
And that's it, now you need to also install it on another computer with which you want to synchronize the Dropbox folder. You will have a new icon in your systray (no matter what operating system you have) which will let you know of some operations running. Right click it and you will get some options like "Open my Dropbox", recent changes, open web interface and so on:

For Ubuntu, there are also some repositories available. First you need to install the key, so type this in a terminal:

gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys 3565780E

Then add these repositories, depending on your Ubuntu version (System > Administration > Software Sources, second tab: click on "Add"):

Dropbox is supported on Windows XP and Vista (32 and 64-bit), Mac OS X Tiger and Leopard, as well as Ubuntu 7.10+ and Fedora Core 9+.

There has also been users reporting success in running Dropbox on Debian, OpenSUSE, Arch Linux, Gentoo as well as several other distributions of Linux. While Dropbox may work just fine on other platforms, it is not officially supported.

If you are having trouble getting Dropbox to run on your Linux system check if you have the following software dependencies installed: